michael hagerty said:Bryan Simmons said:The first commercial station I pulled an air shift at was KROI-FM in Sacramento in 1976 and at that time it was automated with a Schafer 800 thumbwheel controlled brain that had reel to reels for music and cart carousels for spots and program elements. We affectionately named the machine “the beast”. We did call it voice tracking back then. Actually we used to call it "noise tracking" as a joke. KROI was a rock station and we didn't do too badly ratings wise, though we still lagged behind our sister station and market leader 1240 KROY.
I also worked for Concept Productions run by former KFIG Fresno Program Director Dick Wagner. Most of his talent came from San Francisco, but many more came from Sacramento. He provided all of a station’s music and voice tracking with custom tailoring for each station. He had several formats, Country, AOR, Top 40 and what was then called Pop Adult. Like most of his competitors he closed up shop when satellite formats put him out of business. It was a nice way to make a few extra bucks and really a very pleasant company to work for. So yes, there was more than just Beautiful Music when it came to automated stations.
Bryan:
Thanks for mentioning both the Schafer 800 and Concept Productions...I programmed an FM using both (an A/C format) in Bishop, California from 1974-1976. And, I left there for KUKI, Ukiah, where we had an automated FM running Drake-Chenault's country format.
---Michael Hagerty
Actually I should thank you, I learn a lot from your posts. Same with Mr. Eduardo, although I think he can be a little heavy with the facts & figures. Myself, I don't think calguy was too far off the mark with regards to the bulk of automated stations being beautiful music. There certainly weren't many "live" ones that I can recall and with many markets there were multiple stations in that particular format. So it goes without saying that at one time they may have outnumbered their automated contemporary counterparts.
B